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Outgassing History and Escape of the Martian Atmosphere and Water Inventory
Authors:Helmut Lammer  Eric Chassefière  Özgür Karatekin  Achim Morschhauser  Paul B Niles  Olivier Mousis  Petra Odert  Ute V Möstl  Doris Breuer  Véronique Dehant  Matthias Grott  Hannes Gröller  Ernst Hauber  Lê Binh San Pham
Institution:1. Space Research Institute, Austrian Academy of Sciences, Schmiedlstr. 6, 8042, Graz, Austria
2. Laboratoire IDES, CNRS, UMR8148, Univ. Paris-Sud, Orsay, 91405, France
3. Royal Observatory of Belgium, Brussels, Belgium
4. German Aerospace Center, Institute of Planetary Research, Rutherfordstr. 2, 12489, Berlin, Germany
5. Astromaterials Research and Exploration Science Johnson Space Center, NASA, Houston, TX, USA
6. Observatoire de Besan?on, 41 bis, avenue de l’Observatoire, B.P. 1615, 25010, Besan?on, France
7. UPS-OMP; CNRS-INSU; IRAP, Université de Toulouse, 14 Avenue Edouard Belin, 31400, Toulouse, France
8. Institute for Physics/IGAM, University of Graz, Universit?tsplatz 5, 8010, Graz, Austria
Abstract:The evolution and escape of the martian atmosphere and the planet’s water inventory can be separated into an early and late evolutionary epoch. The first epoch started from the planet’s origin and lasted ~500 Myr. Because of the high EUV flux of the young Sun and Mars’ low gravity it was accompanied by hydrodynamic blow-off of hydrogen and strong thermal escape rates of dragged heavier species such as O and C atoms. After the main part of the protoatmosphere was lost, impact-related volatiles and mantle outgassing may have resulted in accumulation of a secondary CO2 atmosphere of a few tens to a few hundred mbar around ~4–4.3 Gyr ago. The evolution of the atmospheric surface pressure and water inventory of such a secondary atmosphere during the second epoch which lasted from the end of the Noachian until today was most likely determined by a complex interplay of various nonthermal atmospheric escape processes, impacts, carbonate precipitation, and serpentinization during the Hesperian and Amazonian epochs which led to the present day surface pressure.
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